Here at
Popular Woodworking we like great pieces of furniture for the projects we publish in the magazine. What we
really like are great pieces of furniture with a good story behind them. In our November 2007 issue, we have an article by
Darrell Peart that is exactly that – a reproduction of a library table originally made in the workshops of Peter and John Hall. The Hall brothers made the furniture designed by
Greene & Greene in the early 1900s.

This table has all the design elements of Greene & Greene, but its actual origin is something of a mystery. While Darrell was doing research for his book
"Greene & Greene: Design Elements for the Workshop," he visited the grandson of Peter Hall. In the living room was this table, that had been altered in the 1950s to make a coffee table. Darrell posted some pictures on the
Yahoo! Greene & Greene group and I got in touch with him to see if he would build a reproduction of this piece for
Popular Woodworking.

Darrell kindly agreed and the article is featured in our
November issue. Darrell is thorough and meticulous, and sent us more material than we could fit in an 8-page article. Not wanting this to go to waste, we are putting the extra text, drawings and photos online in a pdf document. Click the link at the bottom of this entry to download it. Also online is a slide show of detail photos of the original table, and the lower 12" inches that have survived.
Click here to download additional text, drawings and photos. (1.04 MB)
Click here to download a slide show of detail photos of the original table.(2.52mb)— Robert W. Lang